The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)

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The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)

Information

  • Project Name: The Czech Lanterns
  • Practice: MVRDV
  • Gross Built up Area: 83,000m2
  • Project Location: Prague
  • Country: Czech Republic
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Winy Maas, Gideon Maasland
  • Design Team: Gijs Rikken, Gustavo van Staveren, Daniele Dalbosco, and Mercedes Andrades
  • Clients: Prague Airport
  • Others: Strategy and Development: Jesper Ewoldt, Alex Rodriquez, Copyright: MVRDV Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs, Nathalie de Vries, Co-architect: NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants), Visualizations: © Atchain
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Excerpt: The Czech Lanterns by MVRDV and NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants) is an architecture project with a contemporary approach and a strong emphasis on sustainability and adequacy. Underpinned by the principles of sustainability and building for the future, the project embraces unique design elements which will make for a very immersive, exciting experience as passengers pass through Václav Havel Airport Prague.

Project Description

The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© Atchain

[Text as submitted by architect] MVRDV and NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants) have won the competition to design three new buildings at Václav Havel Airport Prague, the largest airport of Prague and the Czech Republic. The design extends Terminal 1 of the airport with new buildings for a central security facility of the airport’s security area, business and VIP lounges and a vertiport. On the other side of the airport loop road, another building will contain a hotel, conference centre, and parking facilities.

The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)

These sustainable, hybrid structures offer the airport a great deal of flexibility to easily accommodate any future expansion or rearrangement. Meanwhile, the exteriors are ‘draped’ with an illuminated, programmable satellite image of the Czech Republic to form three “Czech Lanterns” that define a new airport boulevard and welcome visitors from afar.

The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)

Together, the three buildings will be the first elements of the airport that passengers see upon arrival, whether they are landing by plane, or travelling to the airport by car, taxi, or bus. The additions to Terminal 1 itself extend the existing departures hall eastward in two phases, with the first hosting additional passenger handling areas such as the security screening.

The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© Atchain
The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)

A table-like, hybrid structural approach based on four supporting cores and large uninterrupted spans forms the flexible base for the new buildings. Concrete and steel are necessary for parts of the structure, while glued laminated timber joists support lightweight hollow concrete floors to reduce the structure’s embodied carbon.

With frontages onto both the airport loop and the airfield, the two airport terminal expansion buildings are designed to be as transparent as possible, allowing direct views through the building to the other side. Courtyards between the buildings are densely planted with local species of vegetation, giving the appearance of a thick forest on each side of the security area.

The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)

In the first phase, the security process is designed to be seamless: the vertiport access, as well as business and VIP lounges, are located on the first floor, allowing there to be no level changes or opaque barriers in the security area. This means that the travellers’ goal – the airfield – is always visible. Combined with the view onto nature at either side of the building, this helps to minimise the stress of travellers’ journey through the airport.

The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
First Floor Axonometric © MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)

The second phase building is proposed as a ‘twin’ to the security expansion, with a similar size and the same structural principle. The design team reasoned that this building’s direct frontage onto the airfield would prove to be extremely valuable in the future as the airport continues to expand. With a simple and flexible layout, this building area could be easily transformed into a part of the airport’s handling areas in the future, avoiding a costly and unsustainable reconstruction process.

The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© Atchain

The buildings are ‘draped’ in a green satellite image of the Czech Republic, visible on both the roof and the ceiling of the interior. On the exterior, this printed glass incorporates photovoltaics to generate a portion of the energy used by the building.

It also incorporates programmable lighting elements that allow the building to communicate information about various current events around the country. In addition to providing the buildings’ characteristic appearance, this printed glass also makes the project more sustainable by reducing solar irradiation at strategic points.

The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)

On the other side of the airport boulevard, the third building in the proposal hosts a conference venue and hotel atop a parking structure. Taking advantage of the wedge- shaped site, the design incorporates a grand, five-storey entrance lobby at its front corner that welcomes visitors driving towards the airport.

Like the two airport expansion buildings, it is draped in a satellite image of the country, a portion of which features prominently on the lobby wall. As in the other buildings, flexibility is key to the design to accommodate potential changes in programme over time.

The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© Atchain

According to MVRDV founding partner Winy Maas, most airport experiences these days have become detached from any sense of place, or any sense of control for the traveller, but in Prague this will soon be different. As one passes through security they will feel surrounded by the greenness of the Czech landscape – in the ceiling, which shows its green landscapes and in the courtyards nearby, which host plants that are recognisable from the Czech biotope.

The experience will give a sense of calm and control, a moment to feel grounded, just before they take off. Coming back to the Czech Republic it gives a sense of return, with the three Czech Lanterns guiding one home from afar. Esther Kromhout, Director at NACO believes that underpinned by the principles of sustainability and building for the future, they’re also embracing unique design elements which will make for a very immersive, exciting experience as passengers pass through Václav Havel Airport Prague.

The Czech Lanterns | MVRDV + NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants)
© Atchain

According to Jiří Kraus, Vice-chairman of the Board of Directors, working with a globally active architecture studio represents, for Václav Havel Airport Prague, a promise to build world-class architecture with a contemporary approach and a strong emphasis on sustainability and adequacy. He believes that the object of the Terminal 1 centralised security screening point, together with the developed solution for the Terminal 2 expansion, will become the cornerstone of a large-scale mosaic of a strategically important project; completing the capacity-building process for the terminal and raising the airport to a new level of competitiveness and resilience in the future.

MVRDV and NACO (Netherlands Airport Consultants), a company of Royal HaskoningDHV, were selected for the design via a competition organised by CCEA MOBA on behalf of Prague Airport.

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